Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Coast Guard Base Reopens Without 24/7 Rescue Ability: Union Spokesman

The Canadian Press, 02 May, 2016 11:20 AM
  • Vancouver Coast Guard Base Reopens Without 24/7 Rescue Ability: Union Spokesman
VANCOUVER — A Vancouver coast guard base controversially shuttered by the previous Conservative government has reopened, but a union spokesman says it lacks around-the-clock rescue capacity.
 
Kitsilano station opened on Sunday with two rigid inflatable vessels, one pollution-response vessel and three crew members, said Bill Tieleman of the Union of Canadian Transportation Employees.
 
"The government promised in the election campaign that it would be restored to a full 24/7 search and rescue centre. That's what the union expects to happen. This is not it," he said.
 
The Canadian Coast Guard has described the opening on Sunday as a "soft launch," with a full launch planned for June, but it isn't clear whether it will increase the number of staff or vessels.
 
The base was closed as a cost-cutting measure in 2013. When a bulk grain carrier spilled at least 2,700 litres of bunker fuel into English Bay last April, city officials complained that the response could have been faster if the base had been open, something the coast guard disputed.
 
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised on the campaign trail to reopen the station, and Fisheries Minister Hunter Tootoo vowed in December that it would be an around-the-clock operation. The 2016 federal budget committed $23 million over five years to re-open Kitsilano. 
 
Tieleman said starting Sunday, the station will be staffed by three employees who work eight hours and are on call for 16 hours. While on call, they must be within 30 minutes of the station, he said.
 
"They are not working 24/7," he said. "If there is an emergency after daytime operating hours, they're on call to go and respond."
 
Before the base was closed, it was staffed 24 hours a day by a crew of 13, allowing three staff members to be on site at all times, he said.
 
Tieleman also said the base used to have a large all-weather cutter called the Osprey, but that vessel was decommissioned and sold after the base closed.
 
Instead, the base opened Sunday with one rigid inflatable vessel with a cabin called the CCGS Moorhen, one without a cabin called the CCGS Kitsilano 1, and a pollution-response vessel for oil spills, said Tieleman.
 
The Canadian Coast Guard did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Sunday, but Assistant Commissioner Roger Girouard said in an email to coast guard personnel that officials have worked hard on a tight time frame to get the station ready.
 
"It has been renovated, and equipment and assets are in place to support 24/7 operations," he said in the email dated Saturday.
 
Girouard added that the coast guard continued to work on a plan for the station's enhanced marine response capacity, which will include environmental response ability, emergency response training and an exercise program for partners, local First Nations and coastal communities.
 
Meanwhile, the Canadian Coast Guard is still planning to close a marine communication and traffic services centre in Comox on Vancouver Island, according to the union representing employees there.
 
Unifor has said that if the Comox centre's closure is allowed to go ahead on May 10, despite the protests of frontline coast guard officers, there will be fewer back-ups in case of emergency.
 
By monitoring traffic, the centres are the "first line of defence" for mariners in distress or when an ecological disaster strikes, the union said. Over the last two years nine of 22 marine communciation and traffic centres have been closed.

MORE National ARTICLES

Eradication Of Zika-Spreading Mosquito In Brazil Unlikely

RECIFE, Brazil — In the 1940s and 1950s, Brazilian authorities made such a ferocious assault on Aedes aegypti — the mosquito that spreads the Zika virus — that it was eradicated from Latin America's largest country by 1958.

Eradication Of Zika-Spreading Mosquito In Brazil Unlikely

Peer-to-peer Car Rental Company Turo Launches In Alberta, Ontario And Quebec

Peer-to-peer Car Rental Company Turo Launches In Alberta, Ontario And Quebec
Turo, which debuted as RelayRides in 2009 and now operates in more than 2,500 cities, facilitates vehicle rentals between car owners and anyone needing a ride.

Peer-to-peer Car Rental Company Turo Launches In Alberta, Ontario And Quebec

Helping seniors share wealth of knowledge through new Elder Bank

Helping seniors share wealth of knowledge through new Elder Bank
The pilot project will reach out to seniors and capture their wealth of knowledge in a Triple “E” Elder Bank that can be accessed by the general public.

Helping seniors share wealth of knowledge through new Elder Bank

Jaylen Sandhu Murder: Surrey Teenager Charged With Second-Degree Stabbing Murder

Jaylen Sandhu Murder: Surrey Teenager Charged With Second-Degree Stabbing Murder
18-year-old male has been charged with second-degree murder following the December 2014 stabbing that killed 17-year-old Jaylen Sandhu

Jaylen Sandhu Murder: Surrey Teenager Charged With Second-Degree Stabbing Murder

Early Heat Wave In B.C., Has Wildfire Service Hoping For Signs Of Wet June

KAMLOOPS, B.C. — As much of the British Columbia Interior prepares for several days of summer-like temperatures, the provincial wildfire service is taking a longer view.

Early Heat Wave In B.C., Has Wildfire Service Hoping For Signs Of Wet June

RCMP Inestigating After Body Found In Northern B.C., Cause Of Death Unknown

RCMP Inestigating After Body Found In Northern B.C., Cause Of Death Unknown
The North District Major Crime Unit has identified the body as possibly belonging to a 51-year-old resident of Fort St. James.

RCMP Inestigating After Body Found In Northern B.C., Cause Of Death Unknown